The colonial categorisation of African peoples into distinct groups such as Bantu, Nilotes, Khoi, and other artificial classifications was a deliberate and harmful process. These categories had no basis in reality but were created to justify colonial exploitation and control.
Dividing African populations into racial categories was intended to establish a hierarchy that portrayed certain groups as more “civilised” or advanced than others. Rooted in pseudo-scientific racial theories, these classifications had no factual basis but served to justify European domination.
The end of apartheid in South Africa has given rise to new challenges related to these colonial constructions of race. A key issue is the fluidity of the “Coloured” identity, which remains contested as individuals and groups seek to redefine themselves outside the broader African identity.
A significant development is the emergence of a movement advocating for exclusive recognition as Khoisan, adopting the term “First Nations,” inspired by similar classifications in the Americas and Australia. This movement positions itself in contrast to the so-called Bantu peoples, challenging historical narratives that frame Bantu as later migrants to southern Africa due to a mythical “Bantu migration.”
This article argues that colonial-era classifications continue to shape contemporary identity politics. While reclaiming historical and cultural heritage is legitimate, the risk lies in reinforcing the very divisions colonialism imposed. Notably, many people—such as the Inqua, the Giqwa, and the amaNgqosini—also have Khoekhoe origins, complicating any attempts at rigid identity lines.
Tara Roos warns that the rise of the so-called First Nation movement risks oversimplifying the multifaceted nature of Coloured identity. The movement simultaneously rejects and embraces aspects of its past, denouncing the “Coloured” label to escape apartheid-era stigma, while at times leveraging historical privileges under the Tri-Cameral hierarchy, which privileged Coloureds over other African groups. This strategic positioning reflects deeper struggles over belonging and recognition within South African society.
The role of German scholars in shaping racial thought
Leading up to World War I, Germany was at the forefront of academic studies on Africa’s history, ethnography, and languages. Western scholars from Britain, France, and Belgium later adopted and propagated theories developed by German researchers.
These scholars contributed to the belief that African peoples had no history of their own, a notion that laid the groundwork for the infamous Hamitic theory.
This theory claimed that civilisation in Africa came from Asian migrants, the so-called Hamites. Drawing from the philosophy of Georg W.F. Hegel, who classified Africans (excluding North Africa) as “non-historical peoples,” colonial scholars dismissed Africa’s ability to generate its own civilisation.
The Hamitic hypothesis suggested that African civilisation was not indigenous but imported. Groups with advanced social structures or cattle-based economies were deemed to be of Hamitic origin, reinforcing the idea that only non-African influence could bring “progress.”
Karl Meinhof, a German linguist, was central to this racialised ethnolinguistic theory. His work, including Die Sprachen der Hamiten (The Languages of the Hamites), wrongly framed the San people as original inhabitants, distinct from “Bantu races.” This misclassification falsely presented Bantu not as a language group, but as a race.
Bantu: A linguistic group, not a race
The term Bantu refers to a linguistic classification, not a racial group. Bantu-speaking peoples are united by their languages, not by uniform physical or cultural traits. Yet colonial anthropologists conflated language with race, leading to the invention of a rigid “Bantu race.”
This racialisation led to additional artificial categories such as Congoid, Nilotic, and Capoid. These arbitrary divisions justified unequal treatment and racial hierarchies.
For instance, early 20th-century anthropologists like Samuel P. Verner described light-skinned Central Africans—so-called “yellow men”—as separate from their darker neighbours. These views, rooted in skin-tone-based hierarchy, ignored local genetic variation and historical migration patterns. In reality, these light-skinned individuals were part of the broader Bantu-speaking populations and did not constitute a separate race.
The Khoisan, Pygmies, and the race question
The notion that the Khoisan and Pygmies are separate races from Bantu or Nilotic peoples stems from colonial distortions. Both groups are indigenous with distinct histories and languages but have historically been marginalised and misclassified.
The Khoisan, for example, were classified as “Coloured” under apartheid, erasing their unique heritage. This misclassification lingers, and the modern First Nation movement, while aimed at reclamation, risks creating further exclusions.
Tara Roos cautions: “Not every so-called Coloured is Khoi, and vice versa.” The identity remains fluid and layered. Likewise, Pygmy communities in Central Africa have long been misrepresented as primitive or inferior. These classifications served to isolate and dehumanise rather than celebrate the diversity of African identities.
Conclusion: Towards a decolonised African identity
The colonial construction of race in Africa was a strategic tool of division and domination, and its impact persists. From the myth of a “Bantu race” to the marginalisation of the Khoisan and Pygmies, these falsehoods remain embedded in national identity discourse.
Reclaiming African identities is essential—but it must avoid replicating colonial divisions, especially through exclusive labels like “First Nation.”
True decolonisation means rejecting apartheid-era hierarchies and the continued use of terms like “Coloured.” It requires embracing Africa’s full cultural and historical diversity, unshackled from the racial myths of the past.
As decolonial thinkers like Patric Tariq Mellet advocate, restoring dignity to all indigenous peoples demands a break from colonial logic and a renewed commitment to truth and unity.
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